Workers Compensation Newsletters
Dual-Purpose Travel by Employee
"Dual-purpose" travel by an employee occurs when the employee embarks on a trip on behalf of the employer that coincides with travel for the employee's benefit. In other words, the journey serves both the business purpose of the employer and the personal purpose of the employee. Characterization of the trip as business, personal, or both does not have to be made at the outset of the trip. A trip can start out as purely personal but then transform into a business endeavor.
Earning Capacity
The extent to which an individual is "disabled" by workers' compensation standards requires an examination of the individual's earning capacity after the injury in relation to his earnings prior to being injured. Even if the individual realizes a reduction in his earnings after the injury, he must still prove a causal link between the earnings reduction and his injury. Failure to do so will result in a denial of benefits. If the individual achieves earnings after his injury is sustained, there is a presumption that he has an "earning capacity" in keeping with such earnings. However, the presumption can be rebutted by evidence that the individual, in fact, has no earning capacity or that the post-injury earnings he received are not an accurate, fair, or reasonable measure of the individual's earning capacity.
Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act
The Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act is a federal law that provides medical, disability, and death benefits for longshoremen, harbor workers, and other marine employees who are injured or killed in the course of their employment. The Act is administered by the Office of Workers' Compensation Programs of the Employment Standards Administration of the United States Department of Labor.
Representative Payees for Supplemental Security Income Beneficiaries
When a Supplemental Security Income (SSI) beneficiary is unable to manage his SSI funds, the Social Security Administration (SSA) appoints a representative payee to do so on behalf of the beneficiary. A representative payee can be an individual, organization, agency, or institution. Generally, an SSI beneficiary in need of a representative payee includes a child under age eighteen, a legally incompetent adult, and any other person who the SSA determines to be incapable of managing his funds.
Workers' Compensation Terms
Arising Out of and in the Course of Employment



